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词条 United States Court of Claims
释义

  1. Establishment of Court

  2. Tucker Act

  3. Elevation to Article III status

  4. Abolition

  5. Judges

  6. See also

  7. Notes

  8. References

The Court of Claims was a federal court that heard claims against the United States government. It was established in 1855, renamed in 1948 to the United States Court of Claims ({{USStat|67|226}}), and abolished in 1982. Then, its jurisdiction was assumed by the newly created United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit and United States Claims Court ({{USStat|96|25}}), which was later renamed the Court of Federal Claims.

Before the Court of Claims was established, monetary claims against the federal government were normally submitted through petitions to Congress. By the time of the Court's creation, the workload had become unwieldy so Congress gave the Court jurisdiction to hear all monetary claims based upon a law, a regulation, or a federal government contract. The Court was required to report its findings to Congress and to prepare bills for payments to claimants whose petitions were approved by the Court. Since only Congress was constitutionally empowered to make appropriations, Congress still had to approve the bills and reports, but it usually did so pro forma.

The Court originally had three judges, who were given lifetime appointments. The judges were authorized to appoint commissioners to take depositions and issue subpoenas. The federal government was represented in the Court by a solicitor appointed by the President.

Establishment of Court

The Court of Claims was established in 1855 to adjudicate certain claims brought against the United States government by veterans of the Mexican–American War. Initially, the court met at Willard's Hotel, from May to June 1855, when it moved to the US Capitol.[1] There, the court met in the Supreme Court's chamber in the basement of the Capitol until it was given its space to use.[1]

In 1861, Abraham Lincoln in his Annual Message to Congress asked that the court be given the power to issue final judgments. Congress granted the power with the Act of March 3, 1863,[2] and it explicitly allowed the judgments to be appealed to the Supreme Court. However, it also modified the law governing the Court so that its reports and bills were sent to the Department of the Treasury rather than directly to Congress. The moneys to cover these costs were then made a part of the appropriation for the Treasury Department.

The conflict inherent between the two provisions was made manifest when in 1864, the decision in Gordon v. United States was appealed to the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court denied that it had jurisdiction because the decisions of the Court of Claims, hence any appeals, were subject to review by an executive department.[3][4] Less than a year later, Congress passed a law removing review of the Court of Claims from the Treasury Department.[5]

Tucker Act

In 1887, Congress passed the Tucker Act ({{USStat|24|505}}), which further restricted the claims that could be submitted directly to Congress and required the claims instead to be submitted to the Court of Claims. It broadened the court's jurisdiction so that "claims founded upon the Constitution" could be heard. In particular, this meant that monetary claims based on takings under the eminent domain clause of the Fifth Amendment could be brought before the Court of Claims. The Tucker Act also opened the Court to tax refund suits.

Depredations against American shipping committed by the French during the Quasi-War of 1793 to 1800 led to claims against France that were relinquished by the terms of the Treaty of 1800. Since the claims against France were no longer valid, claimants continually petitioned Congress for the relief that had been waived by the treaty. Only on January 20, 1885, a law was passed, 23 Stat. 283, to provide for consideration of the matter before the Court of Claims. The lead case, Gray v. United States, 21 Ct. Cl. 340, written by Judge John Davis, includes a complete discussion of the historical and political circumstances that led to the hostilities between the United States and France and their resolution by treaty. The cases, termed "French Spoliation Claims", continued in the court until 1915.

In 1925, Congress changed the structure of the Court of Claims by authorizing the Court to appoint seven commissioners who were empowered to hear evidence in judicial proceedings and report on findings of fact. The judges of the Court of Claims would then serve as a board of review for the commissioners.

In 1932, Congress reduced the salary of the judges of the Court of Claims as part of the Legislative Appropriation Act of 1932. Thomas Sutler Williams was one of the judges of the Court, and he sued the federal government by claiming that his salary could not be cut because the Constitution had specified that judicial salaries could not be reduced. The Supreme Court ruled on Williams v. United States in 1933, deciding that the Court of Claims was an Article I or legislative court and so Congress had the authority to reduce the salaries of the judges of the Court of Claims.[6]

Beginning in 1948, Congress directed that when directed by the court, the commissioner could make recommendations for conclusions of law ({{USStat|62|976}}). Chief Judge Wilson Cowen made that mandatory under the court rules in 1964.

Elevation to Article III status

On July 28, 1953, Congress passed a law to convert the Court of Claims into an Article III court and to raise the number of commissioners to 15.[7] In spite of the Congressional statement of the Court's status, when Judge J. Warren Madden was sitting by designation with the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, one of the parties asked for the decision to be thrown out on the basis that Madden was not a valid judge in that court. On appeal, the Supreme Court, in Glidden Co. v. Zdanok, held that the Court of Claims was a proper Article III court, and its judges could sit by designation and assignment on other courts.[8] Ironically, the judges could no longer sit on Congressional reference cases because of this change since an independent court could not act in an advisory role to Congress. The solution, enacted by Congress in 1966, was to have the trial judges hear the cases, upon assignment by the chief judge of the trial division.[9]

Two more judges were added to the court in 1966, bringing the total to seven.[10]

Congress terminated the Indian Claims Commission in 1978 and required that any pending cases to be transferred to the Court of Claims. Of the 170 cases so transferred, many were complicated longstanding accounting claims that had been before the Commission for years. One of the most famous of these cases was United States v. Sioux Nation of Indians, which ultimately reached the Supreme Court.[11] Aside from its large judgment awarded to the Sioux, the case also featured interesting questions about judicial power and the ability of Congress to waive the Federal government's legal defense of res judicata to allow a claim to be judicially determined.[12]

Abolition

In 1982, Congress abolished the court, transferring its trial level jurisdiction to the new United States Claims Court, now known as the United States Court of Federal Claims, and its appellate jurisdiction to the equally-new United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. By then, the Court had expanded to have seven judges; they were transferred to the Federal Circuit.[13]

Judges

Following is a list of judges who have served on the United States Court of Claims up to the merger of the Court into the Federal Circuit.

Judge Began active
service
Ended active
service
Appointed by
Isaac Newton|Blackford}}18551859Franklin Pierce
John James|Gilchrist}}18551858Franklin Pierce
George Parker|Scarburgh}}18551861Franklin Pierce
Edward G.|Loring}}18581877James Buchanan
James|Hughes|dab=representative}}18601864James Buchanan
Joseph|Casey|dab=congressman}}18611870Abraham Lincoln
Ebenezer|Peck}}18631878Abraham Lincoln
David|Wilmot}}18631868Abraham Lincoln
Charles Cooper|Nott, Sr.}}18651916Abraham Lincoln
Samuel|Milligan}}18681874Andrew Johnson
Charles Daniel|Drake}}18701885Ulysses Grant
William Adams|Richardson}}18741896Ulysses Grant
John Chandler Bancroft|Davis}}1877
1882
1881
1883
Rutherford B. Hayes
Chester A. Arthur
William H.|Hunt}}18781881Rutherford B. Hayes
Glenni William|Scofield}}18811891James A. Garfield
Lawrence|Weldon}}18831905Chester A. Arthur
John|Davis|dab=1851-1902}}18851902Chester A. Arthur
Stanton Judkins|Peelle}}18921913Benjamin Harrison
Charles Bowen|Howry}}18971928Grover Cleveland
Francis Marion|Wright}}19031905Theodore Roosevelt
George Wesley|Atkinson}}19051916Theodore Roosevelt
Samuel Stebbins|Barney}}19051919Theodore Roosevelt
Fenton Whitlock|Booth}}19051947Theodore Roosevelt
Edward Kernan|Campbell}}19131938Woodrow Wilson
George Eddy|Downey }}19151926Woodrow Wilson
James|Hay|dab=politician}}19161931Woodrow Wilson
Samuel Jordan|Graham}}19191951Woodrow Wilson
John McKenzie|Moss}}19261929Calvin Coolidge
William Raymond|Green}}19281947Calvin Coolidge
Nicholas John|Sinnott}}19281929Calvin Coolidge
Benjamin Horsley|Littleton}}19291966Herbert Hoover
Thomas Sutler|Williams}}19291940Herbert Hoover
Richard Smith|Whaley}}19301951Herbert Hoover
Samuel Estill|Whitaker}}19391967Franklin D. Roosevelt
John Marvin|Jones}}19401947Franklin D. Roosevelt
J. Warren|Madden}}19411972Franklin D. Roosevelt
George Evan|Howell}}19471953Harry S. Truman
Don Nelson|Laramore}}19541982Dwight Eisenhower
James Randall|Durfee}}19601977Dwight Eisenhower
Oscar Hirsh|Davis}}19621982John F. Kennedy
Linton McGee|Collins}}19641972Lyndon B. Johnson
Arnold Wilson|Cowen}}19641982Lyndon B. Johnson
Philip|Nichols Jr.}}19661982Lyndon B. Johnson
Byron George|Skelton}}19661982Lyndon B. Johnson
Robert Lowe|Kunzig}}19711982Richard Nixon
Marion Tinsley|Bennett}}19721982Richard Nixon
Shiro|Kashiwa}}19721982Richard Nixon
Daniel Mortimer|Friedman}}19781982Jimmy Carter
Edward Samuel|Smith}}19781982Jimmy Carter

See also

  • Charles Cooper Nott, Sr., Chief Justice (1896–1905)
  • George W. Atkinson, Associate Justice (1905–1916)
  • Category:Judges of the United States Court of Claims

Notes

1. ^U.S. Courts, United States Court of Federal Claims: The People's Court.
2. ^{{USStat|12|765}}
3. ^Gordon v. United States, {{ussc|source=f|69|561|1864}}
4. ^see also Gordon v. United States, 117 U.S. 697 (1864).
5. ^{{USStat|14|9}}
6. ^Williams v. United States, {{ussc|source=f|289|553|1933}}
7. ^{{USPL|83|158}}, {{USStat|67|226}}
8. ^{{ussc|source=f|370|530|1962}}
9. ^{{USPL|89|681}}, {{USStat|80|958}}
10. ^{{USPL|89|425}}, {{USStat|80|139}}
11. ^United States v. Sioux Nation of Indians, {{ussc|source=f|448|371|1980}}
12. ^{{cite book | last = Lazarus | first = Edward | authorlink = Edward Lazarus | title =Black Hills, White Justice | publisher = HarperCollins | year =1991 | location = New York | isbn= 0-06-016557-X}}
13. ^{{USPL|97|164}}, {{USStat|96|50}}

References

Books
  • {{cite book| last=Richardson | first=William Adams | authorlink= William Adams Richardson | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_3QDAAAAQAAJ&printsec=titlepage |title=History, Jurisdiction, and Practice of the Court of Claims (United States)|location= Washington, D.C.| year=1885| publisher=Government Printing Office | edition=2nd }}
  • {{cite book| last=Bennett| first=Marion Tinsley| authorlink=Marion Tinsley Bennett| title=The United States Court of Claims: A History; Part I: The Judges, 1855–1976| location=Washington, D.C.| publisher=Committee on the Bicentennial of Independence and the Constitution of the Judicial Conference of the United States| year=1976}}
  • {{cite book| last=Cowen| first=Wilson| authorlink=Arnold Wilson Cowen |author2=Philip Nichols Jr |author3=Marion T. Bennett | title=The United States Court of Claims: A History; Part II: Origin, Development, Jurisdiction, 1855–1978| publisher= Committee on the Bicentennial of Independence and the Constitution of the Judicial Conference of the United States| year=1978|location= Washington, D.C.}}
Journals
  • {{cite journal| title=The Constitutional Status of the Court of Claims| journal=Harvard Law Review| volume=68| issue=3|date=January 1955| pages=527–535| doi=10.2307/1337629| publisher=Harvard Law Review, Vol. 68, No. 3| jstor=1337629}}
Websites
  • {{cite web| url=http://www.fjc.gov/history/home.nsf/page/coc_bdy| title=Court of Claims, 1855–1982| accessdate=2006-09-28| work=Official website of the Federal Judicial Center |archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20060926085256/http://www.fjc.gov/history/home.nsf/page/coc_bdy |archivedate = 2006-09-26}}
{{Authority control}}

6 : 1855 establishments in Washington, D.C.|1982 disestablishments|Defunct United States courts|United States Court of Federal Claims|Aboriginal title in the United States|Federal sovereign immunity in the United States

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